
Journey to the Fringe
Journey to the Fringe
Show overview
Journey to the Fringe has been publishing since 2021, and across the 5 years since has built a catalogue of 420 episodes, alongside 1 trailer or bonus episode. That works out to roughly 230 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence, with the show now in its 6th season.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 9 min and 47 min — with run-times ranging widely across the catalogue. Roughly 31% of episodes carry an explicit flag from the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Society & Culture show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed yesterday, with 38 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 105 episodes published.
From the publisher
Thanks for checking out our podcast! We look at fringe topics often neglected, or ill discussed, in a light hearted and open manner. These topics run the gambit from the mundane water pollution, recycling, and tax evasion to the fantastical moth persons, time travellers, and paranormal. For us there’s no cryptid too creepy, topic too trivial, or djinn to dreary. Also we like to do exposes on assholes of the UFO community. To keep things fresh (and also because we aren’t really sure how to start podcasts) we start every week off with a Fringey Mini recent news article and discussion (It’s the podcast equivalent of not knowing what to do with your hands). And as we say in our intro from the unexplained to the mundane, join us on our journey to the fringe.
Latest Episodes
View all 420 episodesFringey Mini; Sphinx, But Make It Double
Missing or dead scientists - part 2 of 2
Fringey Minis: Memes DOOM brains
Missing or dead scientists - part 1 of 2
RIP David Wilcock
Lloyd Pye and his Skull
Fringey Mini: Transmission Undeliverable
Little people big world
Fringey Mini - Old story, older meat

S6 Ep 31Opus Dei P2: more pain, less gain
In this two‑part deep dive, we wade back into the shadowy waters of Opus Dei—an organization that somehow manages to be a bank‑adjacent power broker, a cult‑coded spiritual discipline factory, and, according to ongoing legal cases in Argentina, an alleged human‑trafficking operation all at once. We trace the group’s reach from the “Little Sisters” labor‑trafficking lawsuits to the celibate numeraries practicing mortification rituals straight out of a Dan Brown fever dream, and then into the political tentacles stretching through Washington, D.C., the Federalist Society, Project 2025, and beyond. With whistleblowers, ex‑members, Vatican pushback, and a suspicious number of billion‑dollar friends, Opus Dei emerges less like a prayer group and more like a shadow network with influence in finance, government, and conservative Catholic power structures. Also: tentacles. So many tentacles.National Catholic Reporter, "The Case Against Opus Dei" (January 2025).

S6 Ep 30Fringey Mini: CTRL‑ALT‑Delete 3.8 Million Files
It's mini time! Today we're cracking the so‑called “mysterious” Black Vault wipe—3.8 million UFO and CIA files vanishing right after Trump demanded alien disclosure—and immediately lose patience when it turns out everything was backed up and boring. What follows is a delightfully unhinged rant about right‑wing UFO culture, political distraction theater, Obama’s galaxy‑brain “aliens are probably real because math” moment, and the way every administration handles disclosure like a middle‑school group project. By the end, the aliens are irrelevant, the outrage is justified, and the only real question left is: what fresh nonsense will Trump use to distract from the Epstein files in the next 48 hours

S6 Ep 29Opus Dei or Nay
This week we're Journeying through the strange, secretive world of Opus Dei—a Catholic power‑sect known for celibacy, discipline, political influence, and a suspicious number of high‑ranking professionals. We cover its origins under Josemaría Escrivá, its rise during Franco’s dictatorship and what you need to know about Opus Dei.Along the way, Taylor bravely confronts his belief that “self‑flagellation” might involve toots (it does not), while we unpack gender‑segregated living, financial obedience, and the cult‑within‑a‑cult energy that keeps Opus Dei at the center of conspiracy chatter. This episode sets the stage for next week’s deeper dive into their real‑world controversies and dark‑money influence.Gareth Gore is the man who wrote the book you're gonna want to check out; Opus: The Cult of Dark Money, Human Trafficking, and Right-Wing Conspiracy inside the Catholic ChurchI will be reading it long after I drafted and recorded this episode - Chelsie

S6 Ep 28Fringey Mini: Cue the Dream, Solve the Puzzle
In this dreamy little escapade, we wander into a study where scientists attempt to puppeteer people’s REM cycles using puzzle soundtracks, eye‑wiggles, and the world’s least glamorous communication method: rapid‑fire sniffing. The big takeaway? Your brain does its best work when you’re not paying attention — or conscious. Drift into this episode, let it rearrange your neurons, and if it leaves you amused, confused, or spiritually altered, go ahead and follow and share. That’s when we know it really got in there.https://www.abovethenormnews.com/2026/02/16/ream-hacking-rem-sleep-problem-solving/

S6 Ep 27The spoons he bent along the way - Uri Gellar part 3 of 3
From crystal balls and cadillacs to psychic warfare and celebrity fallout—Uri Geller’s strangest connections come into focus as we trace his friendships, feuds, and far-reaching claims.In Part 3 of our Uri Geller series, we step into the surreal orbit of a man whose friendships spanned pop icons, astronauts, prime ministers, and alleged alien scientists. Geller’s social circle reads like a fever dream: Salvador Dalí gifting him a crystal ball said to belong to da Vinci; John Lennon handing over a UFO “egg”; Michael Jackson falling out over a documentary that reshaped his public image; and a psychic correspondence with Rabbi Schmuley Boteach that was blessed by the Pope.But the episode doesn’t stop at celebrity lore. We explore Geller’s claims of psychic espionage, remote viewing sabotage, and extraterrestrial encounters—like the time he says Wernher von Braun showed him alien bodies in a refrigerated NASA vault. We trace his involvement in high-profile predictions, his alleged role in military operations, and his belief that Lamb Island holds the key to global peace.This is the chapter where Geller’s mythology goes maximalist: a blend of Cold War intrigue, tabloid spectacle, and metaphysical ambition. Whether you see him as a gifted showman or a psychic provocateur, one thing is clear—Uri Geller never stopped bending reality to fit his own legend.

S6 Ep 26Friney Mini: Archaeologists gotta check those simple hiding places
Just when you thought we had discovered all the moai statues on Easter Island (admit it, that's what you were thinking just now) they go and check the lake beds. Come for the article, stay for the barely on topic banter regarding Eric Adams. news article: https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/archaeology/a70432736/new-statue-discovered-on-easter-island-mystery/

S6 Ep 25Skeptics and failure be damned - Uri Geller part 2 of 3
A deep dive into the backlash that followed Uri Geller’s rise, exploring how psychologists, magicians, and skeptics—from David Marks to James Randi—challenged his claims, reshaped public debate, and helped launch the modern skeptical movement.In this episode, we follow the countercurrent that surged against Uri Geller at the height of his fame. As Geller captivated audiences and government agencies alike, a coalition of psychologists, magicians, and early skeptics began pulling apart the methods behind his supposed psychic feats. We examine David Marks and Richard Kammann’s investigations into the SRI experiments, revealing how simple sensory leakage and poor controls may have fueled some of Geller’s most famous results.From there, the story widens. Ray Hyman’s DARPA‑commissioned inquiry uncovers a trail of unverified anecdotes and unobserved miracles, ultimately branding Geller a “complete fraud” and helping catalyze the formation of CSICOP—an organization that would define the skeptical movement for decades. James Randi emerges as Geller’s most relentless critic, duplicating his feats on stage, sparring with believers, and becoming the public face of scientific skepticism.Yet the episode also explores the more ambiguous territory occupied by Jacques Vallée, who neither endorsed nor dismissed Geller, instead situating him within a broader landscape of anomalous cognition and intelligence‑community curiosity.Finally, we trace Geller’s post‑1970s evolution—from corporate dowser to sports consultant to Pokémon litigant to self‑declared island micronation founder—revealing how controversy, spectacle, and self‑mythology continued to shape his career long after the lab doors at SRI closed.This is the story of the skeptics who pushed back, the institutions they built, and the strange cultural aftershocks of a man who claimed to bend reality itself.

S6 Ep 24Fringey Mini: Coastal collapse and royal rehoming
In this descent into coastal absurdity, we spotlight a Cold War bunker swallowed by the sea. what happens when rising oceans start evicting not just the rich but the royals? Surely British Andy is impacted?!?!Article: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cvg578l22yxo

S6 Ep 23Before the Spoons Bent - Uri Geller part 1 of 3
Uri Geller didn’t just bend spoons—he bent an entire era around himself. In this first episode, we trace his rise from a young Israeli performer with a mysterious origin story to an international psychic celebrity whose claims of telepathy, metal‑bending, and mind‑power captivated a world hungry for the paranormal. Before the lawsuits, the intelligence agencies, and the corporate consulting gigs, there was simply a man, a spoon, and a public ready to believe.Before Uri Geller became a household name, he was a young performer in Israel weaving together a potent mix of charisma, mystery, and just enough supernatural suggestion to ignite the public imagination. Episode 1 explores the early construction of the Geller mythos: the childhood stories that shifted over time, the first demonstrations of spoon‑bending and telepathy, and the cultural landscape of the late 1960s and early 1970s that made audiences unusually receptive to claims of psychic power.We follow Geller as he moves from small local performances to international stages, attracting believers, skeptics, journalists, and eventually the attention of institutions that should have known better. This opening chapter sets the foundation for the stranger turns ahead—government interest, scientific testing, media battles, and the long, complicated shadow Geller would cast over the paranormal world. It’s the story of how a single performer became a global phenomenon, and how the world helped him do it.Links: SRI Research paper: https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP96-00787R000700110003-2.pdfUri Geller on Johnny Carson: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zD7OgAdCObsUri Geller's website: https://urigeller.com/

S6 Ep 22Fringey Mini: The air needs to be more profitable
Have you ever worried that we are not pulling enough profit out of everything due to the pesky clean air everyone likes to breathe? Really... you have? that's kinda weird, I like clean air. But I guess you have some things in common with the current US administration. Why don't you give it a listen, we are not legally required listening in this timeline yet but you can get in on what all those other timelines are legally obligated to enjoy. News source: How Trump’s EPA rollbacks could harm our air and water – and worsen global heating | US Environmental Protection Agency | The Guardian

S6 Ep 21Pale Figures, Dark Encounters
This week we’re diving headfirst into the pale, bony, spine‑like‑a-knife-edge world of crawlers-those emaciated (did I say emaciated), nocturnal humanoids that skitter through forests, rooftops, abandoned buildings, and, apparently, Mozambique living rooms. If the uncanny valley ever decided to get up on all fours and start sprinting, this is exactly what it would look like. As a podcast, we break down everything that makes crawlers so deeply wrong in all the right ways: translucent skin, questionable locomotion choices, and the eternal mystery of cryptid genitals (or lack thereof).We explore the tangled roots of crawler lore—from ancient ghouls to 4chan’s home‑grown nightmare the Rake—and sift through sightings that range from “mildly concerning” to “absolutely not, burn the road down.” Along the way, we roast terrible “confirmed” reports, celebrate the first witness in cryptid history to check for junk, and compare crawlers to everything from fallen angels to a Bigfoot with alopecia. Expect levitating humanoids, fast‑forward forest chases, mirror creepers, and one grandma who drives a Hummer like she’s starring in a cryptid demolition derby. And yes, somehow, the Loveland Frog’s legendary ASS still manages o make an appearance.Hammerson Peters: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VDGY1kfG0k&t=1243sSUSPENDED 'CRAWLER HUMANOID' Encounter on Rural Backroads South of Zanesville, OhioMOZAMBIQUE 'CRAWLER HUMANOID'! A Wildlife Biologist’s Terrifying EncounterPALE CRAWLER HUMANOID Encountered in Central Pennsylvania Appalachian MountainsThanks Lon!